How Free People Move Mountains

Collins Books, September 2008

JUST RELEASED!

As we enter the home stretch of the 2008 presidential
campaign, it is strikingly evident that America has never been more
divided. We are a people alienated from ourselves and our government. When
the red staters and the blue staters do manage to speak to each other,
rancor, mistrust and intolerance drown out all but the most earnest attempt
at civil dialogue.

Into this environment comes an extraordinarily timely
new book that attempts to bridge the gap, re-establish connections and help
all Americans find deeper meaning in our lives. How Free People Move
Mountains: A Male Christian Conservative and a Female Jewish Liberal on a
Quest for Common Purpose and Meaning (September, 2008; $24.95), by Kathy
Roth-Douquet and Frank Schaeffer, is a hopeful and bold narrative that
movingly illustrates how Americans might begin to talk to each other again
and rediscover the shared values that define us as a people.

A highly readable, sometimes funny, sometimes
contentious, back and forth dialogue, the book brings together a founder of
the modern evangelical movement and a liberal Jewish former Clinton aide.
These two thoughtful and highly articulate friends – each in their own way,
deeply spiritual, passionate and patriotic – explore the American dream and
American values and turn them inside out to re-invent and redefine their
true meaning.

Imbued with the bold premise that, at this critical
point in our history, transcending our narrow selves is not an option,
How Free People Move Mountains challenges us to move beyond the
superficial consumerism that is eating away at our ability to function as a
society. It is a call to action that 300 million Americans cannot ignore
and must take to heart – not just for ourselves but for our children and
future generations.

AWOL: The Unexcused Absence
of America's
Upper Classes
from Military Service – and
How it Hurts Our Country

Published by Collins Books, of Harper Collins, May 2006.

AWOL exposes a critical but hidden issue
: the absence of the leadership classes from the military and how that absence creates a failure of democracy. When those who make, support and protest defense policy to the greatest effect have the least actual experience with military – either through their own service, or the service of those close to them – America does not get the best policy possible. Moreover, the class gap
harms our nation's solidarity and ability to sustain engagements.

AWOL's
authors speak from both sides of the divide. Kathy
Roth-Douquet is a former Clinton White House and Pentagon appointee, now
married a Marine Corps officer who has deployed twice to Iraq; she lives
on a military base in North Carolina. Frank Schaeffer is a writer living
in Boston whose his son enlisted in the Marine Corps out of prep school,
deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq, and is now back in college.

AWOL urges a broader sense of ownership and participation in the military among those in the privileged classes. Moreover, authors Kathy Roth-Douquet and Frank Schaeffer argue that military service is not bitter medicine, that those who experience it – including the most privileged – often find it to be inspiring and sustaining, and it can reaffirm their connection to their country.
AWOL makes a policy argument, using surveys and current research,
but it is also tells the personal story of the journey of two American
families.